Working out-of-office now. In studio everyday. It is quite nice, even tho it can be a bit exhausting to do all meetings over Zoom. This day ::::::: www.ohiowednesday.se
More drawings and projects ---> www.mattiasg.se

seen from United Kingdom
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seen from United States
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seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Bangladesh
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seen from China

seen from Malaysia
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seen from Israel
seen from Netherlands
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seen from Russia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
Working out-of-office now. In studio everyday. It is quite nice, even tho it can be a bit exhausting to do all meetings over Zoom. This day ::::::: www.ohiowednesday.se
More drawings and projects ---> www.mattiasg.se
OhiO Wednesday’s October 2020 session created a space for Samantha Hookway to gain feedback on an on-going project where many roles and hats are held by Samantha within her collective studio, Studio Alight. The project at its heart is the designing and developing of E.A.T. Spatial which is a semi-digital, semi-physical exhibition experience and a mix between the site-specific and the website-specific. Academic conferences are now seen naming the merging between meeting digital and meeting physical “phygital”, yet, E.A.T. Spatial is more experimental than just mixing the meeting modes - it also aims to experiment in blending modes of physical media and digital media art-viewing inside the physical space a gallery. Hookway went on to include that the debut exhibition beaming out from Gothenburg’s own, ICIA Konsthall, is another task Hookway has taken on - the curator. And that a group exhibition with international artists included titled MANIPULATIONS is E.A.T. Spatial’s debut exhibition. MANIPULATIONS opens NOV. 14 at 17:30 at e.a.t.spatial.hub.earth.
The OhiO W. discussion space gave room for a discussion of how E.A.T Spatial shall function and its future capabilities whereas the space developed could allow for more uses than just the exhibition MANIPULATIONS itself. Also, questions of how did you get here, where is the funding coming from, how are you getting the word out about this project and how do you feel about taking on the role of a curator were asked and the conversation meandered in an interesting way between thoughts on the digital and spatial, the curatorial, the technical and the hands-on about ”how to”.
More information on Hookway and her work with Studio Alight can be found at www.studioalight.com and e.a.t.spatial.hub.earth.
In OhiO Wednesday’s May 2020, Ram Krishna Ranjan took us on a journey into his PhD project in Film where he is creating methods for inquiry – research and film alike– to interact and take care of stories of the subaltern classes. His project with its departure point of the 1943 Bengal Famine is a project of listening, practicing reflexivity and methods of mediation. During the short presentation a small clip from the film+phd-in-progress was showed. In the showing captured conversations plus an uncovering of the blurriness within the tense relationship of being hungry, living in an oppressed class and colonial policies was activated. As a maker and a researcher, a triangulation method is used where Ram balances his role by strategically collaborating with local Patchitra artists, and the villagers. Together they create conversations and capture oral stories through painted scrolls, performance and film.
The presentation was followed by a discussion where an appreciation was relayed by the audience for the honest approach of attempting to actively listen instead of merely representing subordinate societies in film. Perhaps, the power differences can never be undone but at least there are modes to work towards a more equal positioning. Also, Ram revealed that there is a blurriness in time presenting itself in the project – 1943 reminds the villagers of famine in1985 and more. This blurriness of these flowing histories is highlighted but, also, is present inside the action of mediation.
More info on Ram and the work he does at HDK_V can be found here.
In OhiO Wednesday’s second online edition, Maddie Leach took us inside a new proposal being cooked up for a potential public art project that re-engages with the infamous “modern artistic technological cathedral”, LTH-Föntänen” [or commonly known as “Laxtrappan”] – which never worked to the vision of both the original architect and sculptor. This sculpture sits stripped bare and dormant since the attempt to reconstruct it in the 90s. Leach voiced early reasons why she aims to work with this site, this structure and the community that surrounds this 1970s work in Lund. The base inquiries around this work was, also, relayed: Can public artworks fail? Can public artworks be revitalized; temporary; permanent? And then, adding extra inquiries surrounding the role proposed to play as a re-engagement-provocateur where notions of adaption, authorship, intellectual property law and creating contracts could become objectified as art objects/experiences.
The discussion that followed evolved and created space for Leach to further explain these inquiries this work addresses. The discussion also touched upon thoughts on plans to work with the community that surrounds this historical piece which includes e.g. estates of the original creators, deans of Lund University and more. We also discussed that the Mathematics department is next door to LTH-Föntänen. They work with calculations for engineering contexts, and there is irony in the fact that the fountain has never really worked throughout the 50 years it has faced their building.
Follow Maddie at her website
In OhiO Wednesday’s first online edition, Kalle Ekeroth and Christian Strömqvist inside their collaboration PINPIN STUDIO presented their on-going sound sculpture project commissioned for a playground in Altoona, Wisconsin. The project consists of three large metal geode-shaped trolls that when touched in interactive spots – they make a series of sounds. To level up the engagement, these three sculptures can be touched by multiple children at the same time, and when that happens the children make music together. Kalle and Christian revealed the behind the scenes of how this project which has been on-going since January 2019 has been worked on via distance because early on, they made a decision to not travel to Wisconsin unless absolutely necessary. That original decision was mainly based on the budget and climate crisis concerns.
Yet, then, the discussion that followed took up this distance working on a designing a commissioned playground piece via distance as its main topic (obviously with our current COVID-19 situation). The duo revealed that they have felt that working from distance has both moments of clarity and moments of opacity in the process. One aspect of clarity was that this project has given them a realization that they for aesthetic reasons have the right to stand firm on some decisions even with the distance – they just had to figure out how to visually communicate to gain understandings in Wisconsin. While also there was a realization that there are several moments of controlling the material execution that had to be relinquished – they were simply not there to inspect the process but had to watch from afar. Hence, trust and clear, clever, and visual communication was an absolute must in this project and it worked – this we can all take with us.
Follow the duo Kalle and Christian at their Pinpin.se
Stefan Jensen presented “Den Svenska Linjen” (The Swedish Policy) which is a project in its early stages dealing with photographic production using an investigative approach. The content of this project was about the hidden-in-plain-sight program of the mining and the handling of Uranium in Sweden in the 1950s. Currently, the project consisted of a site visit, tour, and interview that was visualized through photographs and archival studies.
The OhiO Wednesday moderated discussion connected to the roles and ways of Jensen’s inquiry-based project. The group opened up and discussed what it takes to ‘read’ a site and reflected about the role of the artist in a journalistic research project.
Find out more about Stefan and his work at HDK-Valand here.
Naima Callenberg presented her on-going city-planning exhibition project with Röhsska Museet, which will open in the fall of 2020. Unfortunately for OhiO, she could not get into details on content and participating architects but she shared her process of curating and the process of her exhibition design. Her project was circling around her the notion of “discursive architecture” and she was mulling over the question: “how does one communicate a speculative project?”.
After the project was presented a discussion around the question Naima posed became alive as the group delved into communication platforms from the on-the-site exhibition as well as websites or beyond. Another notable discussion was around the role of the architect as being both a draftsperson, a visionary, and a discursive architect.
Follow Naima on Instagram.
Björn Renner took the risk and launched a new project at OhiO Wednesday in October. The work is an investigation of the statement from a long-time client: “Just make it look expensive.” This statement inspired Björn to investigate just what are the aesthetics of “looking expensive” and how can he take artistic freedom within these aesthetics. It was also revealed that he will work with VR, dancers moving with abstracted bodies and utilizing patterns found in luxury design brands.
After the project was presented a lively discussion around the provocation of actually taking on the statement “look expensive” within the creative process came about. Through this discussion, the crowd really got into a constructive feedback session of the work-in-progress presented by Renner plus a self-critical conversation of what we, in the School of Design, tend to believe is “taboo.” or “unspoken”. Renner even received several interesting departure points for the projects further research and development such as considering the question: “how might one move expensive?”
For more information can be found at www.björn-renner.de